down. He waited for McGuire to speak.
âWhoâs Hirons?â McGuire asked.
âWhat?â Parker Leedale blinked.
âThe sign outside says Hirons & Leedale. Youâre the only lawyer I see here. Whereâs the other guy?â McGuire stretched his legs out in front of him and clasped his hands behind his head.
Parker Leedale shrugged and looked at his wife seated in a corner chair, her pencil poised over a pad of lined yellow paper. He grinned when she looked up, as if to say, isnât this guy a jerk?
âMy grandfather, Wyndham Leedale, founded this practice with a man named Harrison Hirons just after the First World War,â Parker Leedale said. âBoth families go back six or seven generations in Massachusetts. This is the oldest continuously operated law practice in the mid-Cape area.â
âWhat happened to Hirons?â McGuire asked.
âMy father bought the practice when Hironsâs son chose not to practice law.â
âSmart man,â McGuire said.
Parker Leedale smiled in agreement until he noticed his wife suppressing a grin and he realized that McGuire had referred to Hironsâs shiftless son and not Parkerâs father. He drew in a deep breath and leaned forward. âAnyway, do you understand the terms of the will?â he asked coldly.
âSure.â McGuire looked out the window at the blue sky as he spoke. âYou and I are co-executors. All of Coraâs liquid assets are left to the American Civil Liberties Union. All of her real estate and possessions are left to me to dispose of as I see fit. Simple.â
âWhat do you plan to do with them?â
âSell âem.â
âGood.â
âYou recommend a real estate agent for me?â McGuire asked.
âIn my role as co-executor, itâs my duty to be involved in such a decision,â Leedale replied.
âOkay.â McGuire stood, placed his palms down on Leedaleâs desk and leaned toward the lawyer who sat back almost involuntarily in his swivel chair. Like his expression, McGuireâs voice had darkened and dropped by a full octave. âWhy donât you give me the name of some buddy of yours in the real estate business who will sell the house in the shortest possible time.â
Parker Leedale blinked. âAt the best possible price?â
âI didnât say that.â
âBut as co-executor . . .â
âAs sole heir, I can dispose of the property for any amount I want,â McGuire said. He was tired of Leedaleâs small-town pretense of power and authority. âYou interested in buying it?â
The lawyer shook his head. âClearly a conflict of interest,â he began.
âThen give me an agentâs name.â McGuire straightened and glanced at June Leedale, who was watching him intently. âOne of your Rotary Club friends, I donât care.â
âCora thought you might want to keep the house,â June Leedale said in her thin voice. âI think . . . Well, I think she hoped you would. Retain it in the family, kind of.â
McGuire smiled warmly at her, a sharp contrast in his mood. âIâm sure she did. But Cora also valued honesty above everything else. And Iâd be dishonest if I decided to stay here.â
âSam Hannaford.â Parker Leedale had scribbled an address and telephone number on a sheet of paper while his wife spoke, and he handed it across to McGuire. âHas an office on Old Queen Anne Road, over near Pleasant Bay Estates. Know where that is?â
McGuire shook his head.
âHeâll come out to see you if you give him a call. Sam knows the real estate market around here as well as anybody.â
McGuire took the paper from the lawyer and slipped it into his jacket pocket. âThanks for your help.â He stood, nodded at Parker Leedale and smiled at June.
âYou like to get together some time?â Parker Leedale asked, forcing a warmer
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